Paleoenvironments of Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho, and its catchment

Radiocarbon ages and age models for the past 30,000 years in Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho
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Published:May 01, 2009
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CiteCitation
Steven M Colman, Joseph G Rosenbaum, Darrell S Kaufman, Walter E Dean, John P McGeehin, 2009. "Radiocarbon ages and age models for the past 30,000 years in Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho", Paleoenvironments of Bear Lake, Utah and Idaho, and its catchment, Joseph G. Rosenbaum, Darrell S. Kaufman
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Radiocarbon analyses of pollen, ostracodes, and total organic carbon (TOC) provide a reliable chronology for the sediments deposited in Bear Lake over the past 30,000 years. The differences in apparent age between TOC, pollen, and carbonate fractions are consistent and in accord with the origins of these fractions. Comparisons among different fractions indicate that pollen sample ages are the most reliable, at least for the past 15,000 years. The post-glacial radiocarbon data also agree with ages independently estimated from aspartic acid racemization in ostracodes. Ages in the red, siliclastic unit, inferred to be of last glacial age, appear to be...
- absolute age
- amino acids
- Arthropoda
- Bear Lake
- C-14
- carbon
- carbonates
- Cenozoic
- chronology
- cores
- correlation
- Crustacea
- dates
- Holocene
- Idaho
- Invertebrata
- isotopes
- Mandibulata
- mathematical models
- microfossils
- miospores
- organic acids
- organic compounds
- Ostracoda
- paleoenvironment
- palynomorphs
- Pleistocene
- pollen
- Quaternary
- racemization
- radioactive isotopes
- sedimentation rates
- siliciclastics
- splines
- total organic carbon
- United States
- upper Pleistocene
- upper Quaternary
- Utah